Tapestries are tiled assemblages, multiples of individual, high-resolution photographs, transforming mundane things—metal grates, stone wall details, windows—into unexpected, new patterns and textures. Printed large (3 ½ feet wide and up to 6 feet high) and presented as wall hangings, from a distance they form large, intriguing patterns while on close inspection they hold meticulous detail—like a finely woven tapestry or Persian rug. The large images shift the scale of experience, from conventionally small “object” prints to human size, demanding a change from normal viewing distances—pushing you away to appreciate the large tapestry pattern, drawing you near to view the almost microscopic detail of worn nicks in the metal of a street grate or the crystalline structure of a piece of granite.